1 / 17

GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS

GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS. ANALYTIC FRAMEWORK. Part 1.

jin
Télécharger la présentation

GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS ANALYTIC FRAMEWORK Part 1 This lecture introduces the analytic framework of the GFS system and describes the components and elements of its structure. It also provides references to an IMF Paper on the use of the GFSM 2001 statistical framework to strengthen fiscal analysis and the IMF Manual on Fiscal Transparency.

  2. THIS LECTURE The previous lecture, Flows, Stocks, and Accounting Rules, discussed the flow and stock data that are collected from GFS statistical units and the rules for their recording and reporting. This lecture describes the relationship among the elements that constitute the GFS framework.

  3. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS ANALYTIC OBJECTIVES • The government finance statistics (GFS) framework is designed to facilitate macroeconomic analysis. • The framework facilitates a comprehensive assessment of the economic impact of government activity and the sustainability of fiscal policy. • In the past, the governments’ priority was to focus on its financing constraint, which was best measured using the cash basis of recording. • Contemporary approach to assessing fiscal policy is focused on resource-based accounting, which has led to the introduction of the accrual basis of recording. • To achieve its analytic objectives, the GFS statistical framework has to generate data that are closely linked to the other macroeconomic statistical • systems: national accounts, balance of payments, and monetary and financial statistics. 3

  4. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS CHANGES TO THE 1986 GFS FRAMEWORK • Three types of changes had to be made to the cash based 1986 GFS framework to produce a system that facilitates resource based accounting: • The definitions of individual statistical variables have been aligned more closely with economic concepts. • A number of conceptual modifications have been made to harmonize the GFS system with the 1993 SNA. • The previous GFS analytic framework has been expanded to include nonmonetary transactions, flows other than transactions, and balance sheets. • For some types of analysis it is necessary to include the operations of public corporations in the coverage of GFS, thus statistics should be compiled for the public sector as well as for the general government sector.

  5. F L O W S TRANSACTIONS Revenue minus Nonfinancial Assets Nonfinancial Assets Nonfinancial Assets Nonfinancial Assets Nonfinancial Assets Expense OTHER ECONOMIC FLOWS OPENING BALANCE SHEET CLOSING BALANCE SHEET Holding Gains & Losses Other Changes in the Volume of Assets = NET OPERATING BALANCE minus Financial Assets Financial Assets Financial Assets Financial Assets • Financial • Assets • cash • other financial assets = NET LENDING/ BORROWING minus Liabilities Liabilities Liabilities Liabilities Liabilities Net Worth Net Worth Changes in Net Worth THE GFS ANALYTIC FRAMEWORK

  6. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS • The core of the analytic framework is a set of four financial statements. Three of the statements can be combined to demonstrate that all changes in • stocks result from flows: • Statement of Government Operations, • Statement of Other Economic Flows, • Balance Sheet • In addition, to provide key information on liquidity, the framework includes: • - Statement of Sources and Uses of Cash.

  7. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS STATEMENTS AND ANALYTIC BALANCES • Two important analytic balances are derived in the Statement of Government Operations: • Revenue less expense equals the net/gross operating balance, which affects net worth in the balance sheet. • Addition of net acquisition of nonfinancial assets to the net operating balance derives net lending (+)/borrowing (–), which is also equal to the net result of transactions in financial assets and liabilities. • The net/gross operating balance is an indicator of the ongoing sustainability of government operations. • Net lending (+)/borrowing (–) is a summary measure indicating the extent to which government is either putting financial resources at the disposal • of other sectors in the economy or utilizing the financial resources generated by other sectors.

  8. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS Statement of Government Operations Revenue Minus (-) Expense Equals (=)Net/Gross operating balance Plus (+) Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets Equals (=)Net lending/borrowing Equals (=)Transactions in Financial Assets and Liabilities (Financing) Net acquisition of financial assets Domestic Foreign Net incurrence of liabilities Domestic Foreign

  9. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS Statement of Government Operations • The Statement of Other Economic Flows presents influences on the government’s net worth that are not the result of government transactions. • The balancing item of this statement is the change in net worth resulting from Other Economic Flows. • Changes in the value of assets, liabilities, and net worth due solely to price effects are called holding gains. • Changes in the volume of assets and liabilities other than from transactions may arise for a variety of other reasons. They can be described as resulting from exceptional or unexpected events, from normal events, or from reclassifications.

  10. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS Statement of Other Economic Flows Nonfinancial Assets Holding gains Other volume changes Plus (+) Financial Assets Holding gains Other volume changes Minus (-)Liabilities Holding gains Other volume changes Equals (=) Change in net worth resulting from Other Economic Flows

  11. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS GOVERNMENT CASH OPERATIONS • The Statement of Sources and Uses of Cash shows the total amount of cash generated or absorbed by current operations, transactions in nonfinancial assets, and transactions involving financial assets and liabilities other than cash itself. • Unlike the accrual-based Statement of Government Operations, the Statement of Sources and Uses of Cash reflects a cash basis of recording. • Information on the sources and uses of cash is important for assessing the liquidity of the general government sector. • The most important analytic balances in the Statement of Sources and Uses of Cash are: the cash surplus/deficit and the net change in the stock of cash.

  12. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS Statement of Sources and Uses of Cash Cash receipts from operating activities Minus Cash payments for operating activities Equals 1 Net cash inflow from operating activities Purchases of nonfinancial assets Minus Sales of nonfinancial assets Equals 2 Net cash outflow from investments in nonfinancial assets 1-2 Cash surplus/deficit Net acquisition of financial assets other than cash Minus Net incurrence of liabilities Equals 3 Net cash inflow from financing activities 1-2+3 Net change in the stock of cash

  13. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS STATEMENTS AND ANALYTIC BALANCES • The Balance Sheet presents the stocks of assets and liabilities at the end • of the accounting period, and net worth, defined as total assets less total liabilities. • Another balancing item in the Balance Sheet is net financial worth, defined as total financial assets less total liabilities. • To facilitate aggregation and reconciliation of flows and stocks, stocks of assets are classified in the same way as transactions in assets. • Financial assets are classified by residency of the counterparty and by type • of instrument. • Most classifications that apply to financial assets also apply to liabilities. Liabilities are first classified by residency and then by type of instrument.

  14. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS STRUCTURE OF THE GFS BALANCE SHEET Balance Sheet NET WORTH NONFINANCIAL ASSETS Fixed assets Inventories Valuables Nonproduced assets FINANCIAL ASSETS Domestic Currency and deposits Securities other than shares Loans Shares and other equity Insurance technical reserves Financial derivatives Other accounts receivable Foreign Currency and deposits Securities other than shares Loans Shares and other equity Insurance technical reserves Financial derivatives Other accounts receivable Monetary gold and SDRs

  15. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS STRUCTURE OF THE GFS BALANCE SHEET (cont’d) Balance Sheet LIABILITIES Domestic Currency and deposits Securities other than shares Loans Shares and other equity (public corporations only) Insurance technical reserves [GFS] Financial derivatives Other accounts payable Foreign Currency and deposits Securities other than shares Loans Shares and other equity (public corporations only) Insurance technical reserves [GFS] Financial derivatives Other accounts payable

  16. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS ADDITIONAL SUMMARY MEASURES FOR FISCAL ANALYSIS • To facilitate alternative fiscal analyses, other than the core GFS balances included in the statements of the GFS framework, a number of additional variables and balances can be derived from GFS data: • Overall fiscal balance, • Adjusted overall fiscal balance, • Overall primary balance, • Primary operating balance, • Gross saving, • Fiscal burden, • Total expenditure, • Total expenditure composition, • Government final consumption expenditure, • Gross investment, • Net wealth position, • Net financial wealth position, • Gross debt position, and • Contingent liabilities.

  17. GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS REFERENCES The IMF Paper on the use of the GFSM 2001 statistical framework to strengthen fiscal analysis can be found at: http://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2005/102505.pdf The IMF Manual on Fiscal Transparency can be found at: http://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/2007/eng/051507m.pdf

More Related